We have ablism: Byrnes refers to Rogen’s character as having a “personality disorder” because he is “a bipolar guard” (the guard bit is irrelevant). Later, he refers to Rogen’s medication as “bipolarity pills”. Uh, yeah…

We have sexism: Byrnes apparently sees no problem with the caricature of Rogen’s character’s mother in principle – the only problem he sees is that “there’s no great ingenuity in coming up with this gag”. (IOW: “It’s just a joke, girls! Sure, it’s not a particularly funny one, but that’s only because it’s unoriginal!”)

And more sexism: Anna Faris’s character is described as “blonde, fickle and slutty”. The rape scene is problematic, but:

There might be a way of making that funny rather than simply heartless. If she and Ronnie were just a little more innocent, maybe we could see their desperate grappling as something less victimising, but I guess that’s missing the point. Hill victimises everyone here, starting with audience expectations of what a comedy should be like.

Yeah, it would have been funny to see Anna Faris’s character raped if she was a little more innocent.

And the biggest problem with the movie, apparently, is that it doesn’t make Paul Byrnes laugh.